Report on the IASPM Research Seminar February 2022

On 17 Feb 2022, IASPM D-A-CH curated the International Research Seminar of the International Association for the Studies of Popular Music. The online event, entitled “Memory and Machines: Perspectives on Narratives and Aesthetics in Popular Music”, presented two talks by Thomas Sebastian Köhn and Robert Michler. International researchers from several IASPM branches participated in the seminar and joined in on discussion based on the two presentations. Once again, the one-hour format proved to be an inspiring exchange platform for international Popular Music Studies scholars. In case you missed the seminar you can watch it on the IASPM Official YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vMUQUUAfbPc

Organisers: Steffen Just, Sean Prieske, Monika Schoop

Host: Rupert Till


Presentations:

Remembering National Socialism: Counter-Narratives in German Hip-Hop
Thomas Sebastian Köhn, Institute of Fine Arts, Music and Education, Leuphana University Lüneburg, Germany

The Berlin-based rapper Ben Salomo and the Leipzig-based rapper Reimteufel have produced and disseminated hip-hop tracks that engage with family memories and collective memories of the Holocaust and World War II. These memories are interwoven with various historical, political, and religious discourses, referring to current processes of marginalization, to Jewishness, and memory sites. Focusing on the tracks ”Stolpersteine” (stumbling stones), released in 2012 by Reimteufel, and on the tracks “Identität” (identity) and “Deduschka” (grandfather) released in 2016 and 2020 by Ben Salomo, the presentation explores how the tracks employ counter-narratives (Köhn 2021) that not only abandon victim-centered perspectives but also question and criticize institutionalized memory culture. Drawing on a combination of music analysis (Moore 2012, von Appen/Doehring 2014, Steinbrecher 2016), video analysis (Flick 2011, Erll 2014) and ethnography (Pink 2015, Schoop 2021), this presentation examines how counter-narratives are negotiated in the hip hop tracks and the accompanying music videos through the aesthetics of lyrics and flow (Kautny 2009) in combination with sampling (Stratton 2016) and material culture (Golańska 2020). Bringing popular music studies and cultural memory studies into dialogue, the presentation demonstrates how hip-hop serves as a medium for establishing an activist, anti-racist, and reflective post-Holocaust perspective in a musical memory practice.


Constructing and Re-Structuring Groove and Aesthetics – Drum Machines as Narrative Agents in Popular Music
Robert Michler, Graduate School of the Arts and Humanities, Bern University, Switzerland

Drum machines as analogue and digital rhythmical devices have set a new approach of accuracy since the 1980s. Using a rhythmical grid and introducing a new set of aesthetics with their electronic beats, they have laid the foundation for a paradigm shift in pop and rock music regarding groove, which was later to be completed by the introduction of quantisation in digital music software, manifesting the fixed rhythmic grid as the most axiomatic element of the groove. The origin of these new music technologies, which I refer to as machine-based-groove, can be traced back to the 1970s and more rudimentary devices, especially preset-based drum machines, which were used in subcultural genres until innovative, programmable drum machines with the ability to create custom grooves entered the mainstream of pop. Focusing on drum machines’ diverse characteristics, this presentation addresses the extent to which their functions, sounds and characteristics can be perceived as narratives, through offering re- and constructed grooves within networks of musicians and producers. On the basis of selected successful pop songs, the presentation explores how specific drum machine devices from the 1980s such as the Roland TR-808, Linn-Drum, and Oberheim DMX have functioned as role models for the new technology, and how their sounds and characteristics became essential to the sound of the decade. In addition, looking back at drum machines of the 1970s, the presentation foregrounds their important overlooked aspects as narrative agents. In doing so, the presentation shows how rhythmic music technology manifests artists' intentions, identities, and sonic fictions, and conveys cultural backgrounds through machine-based groove. This opens up the discussion of how drum machines can offer new perspectives on music technology, narrative, aesthetics, cultural practices, and networks.

For follow-ups of the IASPM Research Series visit https://www.iaspm.net/research-seminar-series/